Donald Tusk, Poland, will not send the complainants in Ukraine but will provide logistical support
Canada and Poland discussed the form of possible post-war peace in Ukraine on Monday while the Allies continued to hammer the type of security guarantee they offer.
Prime Minister Mark Carney met his Polish counterpart, Donald Tusk, in Warsaw where the two leaders put the final touch to an improved strategic partnership.
It was also an opportunity for the two leaders to compare notes after Carney’s weekend in kyiv where he met Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and unveiled more details on Canada’s additional commitment of $ 2 billion in military aid.
Unlike Canada, Tusk said Poland was not ready to offer troops as part of its security guarantees.
“I also confirmed that Poland does not intend to send troops on a mission to Ukraine after the war,” said Tusk in the remarks translated after his meeting with Carney.
“But Poland would be responsible for logistics, the organization of aid for Ukraine, also protecting the European-Russian-Bilar-Bilan border, as they are also Polish borders. “”
On Sunday in kyiv, Carney said that he would not exclude a presence of Canadian troops in Ukraine. But what it would be like has not yet been determined.
The form and scope of the possible ceasefire have not been established.
This means that a peacekeeping force could be something from a group of observers to a heavily armored battle group.
Ukraine has asked its allies to offer security guarantees dressed in iron above all cease-fire or a peace agreement with Russia. The idea is to prevent Moscow from resuming his war at some point in the future.
Manufacturing effort of joint drones
The allies can speak and engage, but the Kremlin said that it would not accept any post-war security force subscribed by the United States or any other member of NATO.
The idea of a so-called coalition of countries arranged to guarantee the security of Ukraine was first proposed by the French and the British.
As part of the new military assistance package unveiled by Canada, a joint manufacturing proposal for drones in Ukraine.
On Sunday, Carney and Defense Minister David McGuinty made a tour of a Ukrainian drone manufacturer.
Ukraine – A world leader in small combat drones – has just signed an $ 50 billion agreement with the United States and will prepare to open manufacturing facilities in Europe.
The scope of Canada’s arrangement has not yet been defined, said McGuinty.
“Listen, it is to be resolved,” he told Canadian journalists in Warsaw on Monday.
“What we did yesterday agreed to say that the two countries would cooperate in the manufacture of drones.”
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